I think it cute that you think of someone who was raised in Harris County Mississippi and living in Texas isn't SouthernI think it's cute when people I know are in Texas, think of themselves as Southern.![]()

I think it cute that you think of someone who was raised in Harris County Mississippi and living in Texas isn't SouthernI think it's cute when people I know are in Texas, think of themselves as Southern.![]()

FWIW, I wasn't talking about you.I think it cute that you think of someone who was raised in Harris County Mississippi and living in Texas isn't Southern![]()
I made a batch for my daughter who came over yesterday and used my cast iron skillet in the oven. Magic. No sticking at all. However, it did require me to pull out a second cast iron for the gravy. I didn't have traditional sausage at the moment so I removed the sausage from a bratwurst and used it. For whatever reason, this sausage seemed to add some real value to the gravy.I can honestly say The Lord truly blessed me with the fact that all of my girls, from my wife on down through my youngest granddaughter can make the best big'ol cathead biscuits and SOS gravy known to man.
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Now when you say "smashing the biscuits into the gravy", are you doing this with a fork and literally just mashing it all together in a nasty looking pile of glop?I think it's cute when people I know are in Texas, think of themselves as Southern.
I remember as a kid we were driving through Oklahoma, like 1970, we stopped at a brand new place, called Cracker Barrel in Oklahoma. We sat there and watched Yankees trying to figure out how to eat biscuits and gravy. It was hilarious. At best they were dipping the biscuits into the gravy. At worst, they were opening the biscuits and spreading the gravy inside and trying to eat them like small sandwiches. While were we over in a corner in our own world, smashing the biscuits into the gravy, and living the good life.
We never use recipes for biscuits, it's all about putting in enough of the next ingredient that it gets to the consistency that is needed. This is passed on through experience. It's just flour, baking powder, salt, and buttermilk, added in that order. You can butter them when you pull them out of the oven.
Recipes are for frauds and people faking their way around in the kitchen, IMO.
At Cracker Barrel, they used to bring the biscuits and gravy in separate bowls, so unless you want to get all servey nerdy, you could just break up your biscuit into the gravy. But, at my house, the gravy would be served poured over the biscuit and then you'd cut your biscuit with a fork and eat them.... but, regardless of which way, good biscuits don't cut smoothly with a fork, so you are sort of smashing them as your eat them. The point is to try to get the gravy to cover each bite.Now when you say "smashing the biscuits into the gravy", are you doing this with a fork and literally just mashing it all together in a nasty looking pile of glop?
Well I'll be trying my hand at it very soon. I'll probably just put some butter on them though. I wish I knew how to make a good gravy. My cooking skills are limitedAt Cracker Barrel, they used to bring the biscuits and gravy in separate bowls, so unless you want to get all servey nerdy, you could just break up your biscuit into the gravy. But, at my house, the gravy would be served poured over the biscuit and then you'd cut your biscuit with a fork and eat them.... but, regardless of which way, good biscuits don't cut smoothly with a fork, so you are sort of smashing them as your eat them. The point is to try to get the gravy to cover each bite.
We don't eat a lot of gravy nowadays, but when we do, we make a bacon gravy with pieces of bacon in it.
The reason biscuits and gravy are so hard to put into a recipe, is that the ingredients are like 10% of what makes a biscuit. If you over mix or over work the biscuits, they become rocks... like English people like to eat. And, with the gravy... damn near impossible to explain to someone in written words how to make a gravy from a roux. It's all about experience and visually learning how it's done.
If one has never made biscuits from scratch, expect the kitchen to be a disaster when done till you get the process down pat.
In the South, you just sort of learn how to make a roux from osmosis, from it going on around you all the time. But, if you check out some videos on making a roux, you are just one step away from having the perfect gravy.Well I'll be trying my hand at it very soon. I'll probably just put some butter on them though. I wish I knew how to make a good gravy. My cooking skills are limited![]()
Mild... WTF is that? I see that at the grocers, but I assumed it was foreigners or something, ha ha. We've always bought the HOT country Sausage which isn't really hot, just seasoned well. If you wanted it to be really hot, you'd have to add some hot sauces.I've never had bacon gravy with my biscuits... But it sounds great.
We always use something like this to make the gravy. Unless it's tomato gravy, which is the best gravy for biscuits.
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Filter sausage.Mild... WTF is that? I see that at the grocers, but I assumed it was foreigners or something, ha ha. We've always bought the HOT country Sausage which isn't really hot, just seasoned well. If you wanted it to be really hot, you'd have to add some hot sauces.
Mild... WTF is that? I see that at the grocers, but I assumed it was foreigners or something, ha ha. We've always bought the HOT country Sausage which isn't really hot, just seasoned well. If you wanted it to be really hot, you'd have to add some hot sauces.
Boak!I typically don't like "Southern" cuisine, but biscuits, biscuits & gravy, tomato gravy and biscuits are all great. Otherwise, Southern cooking is basically all just like this to me:
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Bologna cake - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Ranch dressing... grits... cornbread dressing... blech, you guys can have all that mess.
